horses of the triumphal Quadriga. Venice dominates trade throughout the Byzantine Empire.

1229: Venetian laws are codified.

1242: The first jousts are recorded in Saint Mark’s Square.

1270: The earliest reference to private banks.

1284–5: The first gold ducat is issued; the Mint is founded.

1298: The imprisoned Marco Polo narrates his voyages in foreign lands to an amanuensis.

FOURTEENTH CENTURY

1310: The judicial committee known as the council of ten is created. It is elected by the senate, and made permanent in 1335.

1348: Plague in the city.

1380: The long war between Venice and Genoa, which had continued intermittently for a century, ends with a Venetian victory.

FOURTEENTH TO FIFTEENTH CENTURIES

Venice is at the height of its military and naval power.

FIFTEENTH CENTURY

1421: The construction of the Ca d’Oro begins.

1422: The old palace of the doge is replaced by a Renaissance palace in Saint Mark’s Square.

1462: War breaks out between the Venetian and Turkish empires; it ends in 1479 when the Venetians sue for peace. This signals the beginning of the end of Venetian power in the East. Gradually Venice ceases to dominate trade in the area.

1495: The publisher Aldus Manutius establishes a workshop in Venice for the production of texts in Greek, Latin and Hebrew.

SIXTEENTH CENTURY

1516: The Jewish ghetto is established in Canareggio.

1519: The birth of Tintoretto.

1527: After the sack of Rome by barbarian invaders, Venice offers a haven to countless Roman artists and intellectuals.

1527: Jacopo Sansovino, a refugee from Rome, is appointed public architect. He designs the Mint, the Library, the loggia of the campanile, and part of the Rialto market. He also transforms Saint Mark’s Square into a classical piazza.

1565: The first European theatre, built specifically for the production of plays, is constructed in Venice.

1570: Venice loses Cyprus to the Turks.

1585: Beginning of the construction of the Rialto bridge.

SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

1618: The failure of the “Spanish Plot” to destroy many important political buildings in the city.

1637: The world’s first public opera house is created in Venice.

1669: Venice loses Crete to the Turks.

1678: Vivaldi is born.

1696: Tiepolo is born.

EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

Venice becomes the city of art and pleasure.

1725: Casanova is born.

1774: The greatest Venetian gambling house is closed by public order.

1797: Venice falls to Napoleon, who hands the city over to the Austrians. The doge is deposed and the Venetian republic ceases to exist.

NINETEENTH CENTURY

1805: Napoleon defeats the Austrians and reclaims the city.

1814: The Austrians reclaim Venice.

1848: The Venetians oust the Austrians from the city and re-establish the republic of Venice.

1849: The Austrians reoccupy the city and the republic falls.

1854: The Accademia Bridge is constructed.

1866: The Austrians withdraw from Venice and the city becomes part of the newly established kingdom of Italy.

End: The Lido becomes a popular beach resort.

1895: The first international exhibition is organised. It soon becomes known as the “Biennale.”

TWENTIETH CENTURY

1902: The campanile of Saint Mark’s Square falls.

1917: Venice, as part of the Italian alliance with Britain and Russia in the

First World War, is once again menaced by Austrian forces.

1943: German forces take over the city.

1966: The year of the great flood.

1996: Venice’s most famous opera house, La Fenice, burns down.

Bibliography

Appadurai, Arjun: The Social Life of Things (Cambridge, 1986).

Arslan, Edoardo: Gothic Architecture in Venice (London, 1972).

Baldauf-Berdes, Jane L.: Women Musicians of Venice (Oxford, 1993).

Barbaro, Paolo: Venice Revealed (London, 2002).

Baron, Hans: Humanistic and Political Literature in Florence and Venice (Cambridge, 1955).

——— The Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance (Princeton, 1966).

Bassnett, Susan (trans.): The Flame of Gabriele D’Annunzio (London, 1991).

Berendt, John: The City of Falling Angels (London, 2005).

Berenson, Bernard: The Venetian Painters of the Renaissance (New York, 1901).

——— Lorenzo Lotto (London, 1956).

Berkeley, G.F.H.: Italy in the Making, 2 volumes (Cambridge, 1940).

Bolt, Rodney: Lorenzo Da Ponte (London, 2006).

Bouwsma, William J.: Venice and the Defence of Republican Liberty (London, 1968).

Braudel, Fernand: Civilisation and Capitalism, 3 volumes (London, 1984).

Brion, Marcel: Venice (London, 1962).

Brown, Horatio F.: Venice, An Historical Sketch (London, 1893).

——— Studies in the History of Venice (London, 1907).

——— Life in the Lagoons (London, 1909).

Brown, Patricia Fortini: Venetian Narrative Painting in the Age of Carpaccio (New Haven, 1988).

——— Venice and Antiquity (New Haven, 1996).

Bull, George: Venice (London, 1980).

Burckhardt, Jacob: The Civilisation of the Renaissance in Italy (Oxford, 1945).

Burke, Peter: Venice and Amsterdam (London, 1974).

Cairns, Christopher: Domenico Bollani (Nieuwkoop, 1976).

——— Pietro Aretino and the Republic of Venice (Florence, 1985).

Calimani, Riccardo: The Ghetto of Venice (New York, 1987).

——— Storie di Marrani a Venezia (Milan, 1991).

Chambers, D.S.: The Imperial Age of Venice (London, 1970).

Вы читаете Venice: Pure City
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату